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Written By: Rachel Putman

There’s a particular moment in college when things start to click—not because you’ve mapped out your whole future, but because someone sees promise in you and offers you an opportunity you can grow into.

For Katie Grace Cavaness, that moment came when Dr. Bun Song Lee invited her to join a research project at the University of 㽶ƵAPP–Fort Smith. On a campus built to be small and intentional, opportunities don’t have to wait until a student is “ready.” They can arrive while a student is still becoming, because faculty know their students well enough to notice momentum before it makes its way onto their resumes.

“I first started researching this topic in the fall semester of 2024,” she said “Dr. Lee asked if I would be interested in helping him with research, and, on a whim, I said yes.” 

Katie Grace was a sophomore then, newly enrolled in the College of Business having changed her major from studio art. She hadn’t built an identity around being “the research student” or “the business student,” but quickly, and a little unexpectedly, she found a genuine pull toward macroeconomics: the way it offers explanations for why communities thrive or struggle, why resources collect in some places and not others, and how policy decisions show up in ordinary lives.

Dr. Lee saw that momentum, and nudged Katie Grace to think bigger.

“He pushed for me to apply for the 㽶ƵAPP Department of Education’s Student Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF) grant,” Katie Grace said.

She earned it—funding an extension to the research across the following two semesters, and, with additional support from the UAFS Foundation, a transformative trip to San Francisco to present the project at the Western Economics Association International conference.

“Being able to present our research at an international conference made up of professionals from all around the world has been my biggest accomplishment to date,” she said. “It was a bit intimidating when I went there, but being able to present at the conference instilled a confidence in myself that I had never had before. Not only was I able to network with professionals in the same field and learn about other research projects, I was able to gain real world experience in application.”

The research itself focuses on transportation choices among seniors and people with disabilities in small and mid-sized U.S. cities—places where options can be limited and where the margin between independence and isolation is often thin. In major urban centers, transportation problems can be visible and headline-worthy. In smaller communities, the challenge can be quieter: fewer alternatives, less infrastructure, and fewer “backups” when something is inaccessible.

“Although I did not pick the research topic initially, I believe it is an important subject to be discussed,” she said. “Through my research I have found that there can be instances of inaccessible resources for those who are considered elderly and/or disabled.”

Long term, Katie Grace and her research team hope their work inspires real change. 
“I hope that policy implications can be made in the future to help aid real people,” she said. “Everyone deserves a right to an even playing field.”

Back on campus – or rather, on the UAFS satellite campus at The Bakery - Katie Grace works with economic data daily as an intern at the Center for Economic Development, where she supports data analysis for the statewide Compass Report.

“I’ve learned so much about how to apply economics outside of the classroom,” she said. “The CED has taught me how to apply my economic theory I have learned to real world implications.”

Her role involves analyzing 㽶ƵAPP tax, census, and building-permit data—regionally and statewide—to help build out Talk Business & Politics’ signature economic report. For Katie Grace, what stands out what the process reveals: how quickly a chart becomes a story about real communities.

“I find it very interesting to see how economic theory applies locally,” she said. “It has changed how I see the field of economics since I am able to merge theory and logical conclusions to find out what causes shifts within the data.”

Access is the throughline to Katie Grace’s story. Access to mentorship and experience. Access to funds that make research possible. Access to rooms full of seasoned professionals and work that makes academic principles real, not abstract.

She sees that access as a defining part of the UAFS experience, because at other campuses, students like her might not get noticed. They might not get pulled into meaningful work while they’re still figuring out what they’re passionate about. But at UAFS, it happens every day, because this university is small enough and intentional enough to make it normal.

“Students here are not just a number,” she said. “UAFS wants to support students and push them to succeed.”

“I would not be in the position I am today without the support from my faculty and staff,” she said, naming the College of Business and Industry, the Academic Success Center, the Center for Economic Development, and a long list of mentors and supporters who guided her along the way—including Dr. Lee and her research teammate, Tommy Nguyen. “To them I am very grateful.”

Media Relations

The UAFS Office of Communications fields all media inquiries for the university. Email Rachel.Putman@uafs.edu for more information.

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Rachel Rodemann Putman

  • Director of Strategic Communications
  • 479-788-7132